Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 15 Sep 1932, p. 27

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g polo stars from the _ and Uptown sectors in action Sunday afterâ€" 18, at the Oak Brook adium, York road and d street when the faâ€" lorse troop and Chicaâ€" 2 t e T O T OE ine Boys Scouts of America announce a tenâ€"yearâ€"program which has been developed y as. a definite. contribution toward the upâ€" , building of American citizenship. The program provides that at least one eneroumenmmmnntmes sicwmmamsent boy in exry four arriving at voting age ',p-exh.ibitiom~.bo¢ore'an¢'~ ,lt-h'uf‘hwhd‘ge benefit of four years of Taining < as a y" scout. _ cunfimesiw horse show and polo f ) _ The_plan, it â€"was said. proposes an answer ies "~~ to a growing public demand for a genuinely interested body of citizens, thoroughly deâ€" _ ;Oh‘d to the promhotion of the g:ncr:l welâ€" are ; mittad Â¥n aku calcl o Eh Snndav A + and entirely cam 1 features will include ith music furnished by ommunity Girls‘ band, rls‘ band in the Unitâ€" tween periods of the _ race for women drivâ€" midget- oneâ€"cylinder vill© be staged during intermission of the At the wheels will be éty matrons and debs. h Sunday At ok Freebooters lack Horse Troop URSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 irs clash. ~~The game :80 o‘clock, and is exâ€" Â¥ a record throng, not it is certain to be a pectacular battle, but special attractions anged to enliven the bben Council of Girl Scouts . 1982 ROBotubedPLaâ€"4 222A 41000 LLLS 4+ uent‘s endorsement took g_ rm_of im â€"t0â€"Walterâ€" W.~ Head of cv’v’%v}‘c’uflrfl of the national council of the Boy Scouts of America. The president‘s letter said : Mr. Walter W. Head, president Boy Scouts of America. My dear Mr. Head : & ltwummzhurhninctometouodn recently from your chief scout executive the Nmnof&.-eflfltinofthboyfimd America for the year 1931 and for the first Part of this year, showing that you have not only maintained your strength, but actâ€" Ually increased it. It is most important at this time that the activities of the Boy Scouts of America &nd indeed the activities of all our character building agencies, should be maintrined. I hope that your local council units will, as such #enerous support that the sp reeâ€" Honoy,,... q _"@, P/CCCcessors in serving as B°“°"ll” President of the boy scouts but also upon many occasions has shown an Snusual interest in the development of the Creanization and its activities. The presiâ€" dent‘s endoaraamans 4. j Z1 1 @8 _ the pres precedentâ€" of his p Honoraryv Beasld4 2. Dr. West‘s letter stated that carried the unqualified endorsem ident Hoover, who has not only mhasagec. WV locally, TEN YEAR PROGRAM " 0 many days he felt that all the world was against him, but gradually he became his happy boyish self agrin. One day a package came to his mother from England: It ~contained a pocket knife for George. The burt zndlully healed. New interests erowdsd’ol disappointments â€"into the backâ€" ground. _ Then, just as he was ready to go aboard, his mother appeared and told him that he must not goâ€"that she needed him. . It â€"was a time to try the soul of manâ€" let alone the hearto f a boy of fourteen. The . boy. felt heartâ€"broken beyond. human endurance, and went off into the woods to try to ease the hurt inside his soul. For many days he felt that all the world was against him, but gradually he became his happy boyish self agrin. One day a package came to his mother from Enola4 . Mn m 90 n U ir ieR ant t in the British navy. His halfâ€"brothers and Lord Fairfax had used their influence. George‘s chest was packed and ready to be loaded and the fourteen year old boy‘s happiness was almost unbounded. All his day he had seen ships sailing up and down the Potomac. He had dreamed hundreds of times of those strange lands across the sea. Now he â€"was to go. â€" l 2 e ET PCE the Potomac. Mary Ball Washington was always lonely for George when he was awayâ€"perhaps visiting Augustine: at. Wakefield, â€" orâ€" Laurâ€" ence ‘at Mt." Vernon. Once, against her better judgment, _she. had grudgingly conâ€" .enw: tonb‘er Lboy becoming a midshipman s 4Bu Cere c Roy d uoo P T AiafPeaa‘ i cetaie w her boy had grown up. ‘ To her, he was always a lad. When her gallant boy was hiving horses shot from under him in the early years of his military career, her heart must have ached almost to breaking point. But she soothed her fears by thinkâ€" ing back to days when she had watched over a coughing baby through the long hours of the nightâ€"or perhaps days when a bareâ€" of the nightâ€"or perhaps days when a bareâ€" fu-h&m > wmmmt&rmf'muc otomac. _ Washington was a dutiful, patient, loving son, by training and by inclination of heart. He whs ever tender and thoughtful toward his mother, demonstrating a patience and affection seldom equalled. Mary Ball Washington loved her boy sternly, stoically, much like a Spartan mother. . She loved him tenderly, eagerly, proudly, and tried to conceal the joy and pride she felt. She did not belieye in a great show of affection. . Her mother love was of a still deeper kind. Like all mothâ€" ers she was never quite able to perceive that George seems u_)}:ive been popular with the old man as a hutiting companion. Often they rode fox hunting together. During his days as a surveyor, young Washington often visited this friend at Greenway court, and to the end was his loyal friend. man of Irish background, schooled in Engâ€" land, yet preferring the solitude of the everâ€" enchanting frontier of this new world. that his asgociates were largely ‘older than himsel{. He seems to have greatly enjoyed apprentice experi.enceu\ in surveying with Schoolmaster Williams, and later with James Genn, county surveyor. During his early ‘teen years he spent much time with Lord Thomas Fairfax, a GEORGE WASHINGTON wWAas A REAL BOY â€" His _e-rly J‘.!,'?fl,",’, Vl“nd sense of THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1932 pr Boy Scout News x ‘+ was sard, proposes an answer ring public demand for a genuinely body of citizens, thoroughly deâ€" the prothotion of the general welâ€" entirely committed to the advanceâ€" e CI 2C D 1 (To be continued) M aralte C . ( a letter f New Yo ident i1 of.:be oBroy Scouts of program Four cents:a voter is enough for congressional candidates to spend, says "an investigating committee. Heck, why not make it a nickel and let ‘etm buy an ice cream cone? â€" Boston Hearld. 2 â€"!te EVvemson, gTade 6, Margaret Hunt and Frances Brown: grade 7, Nina Anderson and Leta Toll; grade 8, Grace Ronningen and Hazel Milâ€" Jler; principal, Carl E. Bates; school nurse, Miriam Stryker Easton; school board, C. W. Boyle, George Engstrom, and William Galloway. in cuinredinbeiiiatate tstices. i __The faculty remains the same: Kindergarten, â€" Marian Mereness; grade 1, Christine Knaak: grade 2, Genevieve Card and Dorothy Lidâ€" gerwood; grade 3, Mildred Newton; grade 4, Mabel Ablard; grade 5, ‘"It aims to definitize in a dramatic the consensus of. opinion of the leade of scouting, that following the perio organization expansion, during the p of our earlier years, there aho:::l not development tot he end that the a realization of the ultimate purpose of s ing ‘the development of men of char trainedâ€"for participating citizenship,‘ _ be. definitely sought within m specific p t M Ight within . opened on Monday, Sept. 12, with an enrollment of 380 pupils, which is 30 less than the previous term. Noticeable difference in the kinderâ€" garten was marked, so that there will be but one class in the mornâ€" ing and none in the afternoon. Prinâ€" cipal Bates expects the enrollment to reach 390 before long. Fourteen children have dropped to attend St. Norbert‘s Catholic school in Techny. 1CETHEIG offuP ooted TN entanniP omeitaaaai s Ak L Li o) c when _ economic conditionsâ€"haveâ€"added _ so much to the problems of the nations and the world. To me, it is inspiring to realize that everyone in scouting has an. opportunâ€" ity through <ap roven program, to make a definite contribution for the improvement of society. ' "It u;uâ€"‘bx;t“-n;;t;-l:;‘l.â€"'t}nat such a ment should take place at this T our history and it seems providen "It will mean a better community, a betâ€" ter state, a better nation. It will be a defâ€" inite contribution of the Boy Scouts of America to our country. said : it ‘Writing to Mr. Fowler concerning â€" the program of citizenship growth, Dr. West the scout + rmvn e dh n 2w l C20s CCC CE EC OO 3 your nationalâ€"councilt of" a comprehensive wexeecis CbZl )C Es . oo m 0 es NOme mmE TV T 1932. ; . which gave to Your oreanizatin whien .1 gave to your organization on the occasion of the Washington meeting . has resulted in the development and adoption by " M )06 naturai that such a developâ€" ent should take place at this period in r history and it seems providential that I:hould hke‘ place. at this particular time The Deerfield you Enrolls 380 Pupils On Opening Day 3CNool for not only bring to thousands he previous term. ence in the kinderâ€" ked, so that there class in the mornâ€" 1931â€"may be equalled in . during the period men of character should now be leadership THE RRESS scoutâ€" MARSHALL FIELD & COMPANY LAKE FOREST STORE * MARKET SQUARE The new Fall Fashions are now on display in the new section, come in now and make your selections early APPARE L The Lake Forest Store has opened a new and larger Apparel Section for Misses and Women in the space formerly occupied by the Public Service Company ANNOUNCING the opening of our New and Enlarge d E CTTON TWENTYâ€"THREE t

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